Krystian W. Pilarczyk | |
---|---|
Born | Ogorzelczyn, Poland | 14 February 1941
Alma mater | Gdańsk University of Technology |
Known for | Delta Works |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Civil Engineering Hydraulic Engineering |
Institutions | Instytut Budownictwa Wodnego-Polskiej Akademii Nauk Gdańsk Waterloopkundig Laboratorium Rijkswaterstaat |
Thesis | (1964) |
Krystian Walenty Pilarczyk (born 14 February 1941) is a hydraulic engineer whose contributions to civil and hydraulic engineering include the development and improvement of the Izbash formula, along with the Pilarczyk formula for the stability of block revetments. He is the author and editor of a number of academic papers and textbooks on coastal, river, and hydraulic engineering subjects.
Between 1971 and 1978, Pilarczyk was involved in the design of the Delta Works, where he was coordinator of applied research, undertaking work on the closure of tidal basins and on the static and dynamic stability of armourstone and riprap used in coastal and river engineering applications. He has acted as an advisor on coastal engineering projects to the World Bank and Asian Development Bank, as well as lecturing at the IHE Delft Institute for Water Education and Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute.
Pilarczyk was born in the village of Ogorzelczyn in west central Poland in 1941. He studied at the Technikum Żeglugi Śródlądowej (English: Technical School of Inland Waterways) in Wrocław, graduating in 1959. He then trained as a hydraulic engineer at Gdańsk University of Technology, where he completed a master's degree in Hydraulic and Coastal Engineering in 1964. [1] [2]
Upon graduation, he initially worked as a research engineer at the Instytut Budownictwa Wodnego (English: Institute of Hydro-Engineering) of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Gdańsk, before moving to the Netherlands where he worked as a research engineer at the Waterloopkundig Laboratorium in Delft from 1966 until 1968. [3] He returned to the Institute of Hydro-Engineering from 1968 until 1971, when he again returned to the Netherlands to take up a position with Rijkswaterstaat. It was in this role, as research manager with Rijkswaterstaat's Deltadienst (English: Delta Service), that Pilarczyk had responsibility for the design of Delta Works projects. [1]
Upon joining Rijkswaterstaat, Pilarczyk was involved in the Delta Works until 1978, as a coordinator of applied research and designer. He initiated several major research programs, including studies on the static and dynamic stability of riprap and armourstone, the closure of tidal estuaries, prediction techniques for scour, and protective structures to prevent erosion. After the dissolution of the Delta Service towards the end of the Delta Works programme, he transferred to Rijkwswaterstaat's Dienst Weg- en Waterbouwkunde (DWW, English: Roads and Hydraulic Engineering Department).
During his time at Rijkswaterstaat, Pilarczyk commenced a major research programme to investigate the effects of wave run-up and wave overtopping on the stability of dikes and other hydraulic structures with geotextiles. [4] The results from this programme led to the incorporation of design formulas in international design guidelines such as the Rock Manual [5] and the EurOtop Manual. [6] [7]
From around 1985, Pilarczyk sought to strengthen ties between Rijkswaterstaat and other institutions in the Netherlands such as Delft University of Technology, with his former colleagues at the Hydroengineering Institute in Gdańsk. As a result of this collaboration, Rijkswaterstaat gained access to the results of much hydraulic engineering research from the Eastern Bloc countries which had previously been unavailable to international academia, and a significant amount of this material was then translated into English. [8] [9] [10]
In 1996, Pilarczyk travelled to Vietnam to commence an inventory on the condition of the country's dikes. [11] This led to ongoing collaboration between Rijkswaterstaat and the Vietnamese public works authorities, and the development of training courses for staff in Vietnam, as well as a comprehensive Vietnamese handbook for the design of coastal and river protection structures. [12] A further development from the collaboration initiated by Pilarczyk was research cooperation between Delft University of Technology and Thuyloi University in a programme funded by both the Dutch and Vietnamese governments, [13] which resulted in the creation of a coastal engineering faculty at Thuyloi, complete with a coastal engineering laboratory. [14]
Pilarczyk also initiated collaboration with the Instituto Superior Politécnico Jose Antonio Echevarria in Cuba. As a result of this, several Dutch hydraulic engineering design guides and textbooks were translated into Spanish. [15] [1]
Pilarczyk retired on 1 December 2004, but continued to work on a contract basis for Rijkswaterstaat, and also advised the World Bank and Asian Development Bank. He authored and edited several papers and books on coastal and hydraulic engineering, and worked part-time as a lecturer at the IHE Delft Institute for Water Education in Delft and at the Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute. [16] In December 2002, he was appointed Honorary Professor of the Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute. [1]
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)A groyne is a rigid hydraulic structure built perpendicularly from an ocean shore or a river bank, interrupting water flow and limiting the movement of sediment. It is usually made out of wood, concrete, or stone. In the ocean, groynes create beaches, prevent beach erosion caused by longshore drift where this is the dominant process and facilitate beach nourishment. There is also often cross-shore movement which if longer than the groyne will limit its effectiveness. In a river, groynes slow down the process of erosion and prevent ice-jamming, which in turn aids navigation.
IHE Delft Institute for Water Education is the largest international graduate water education facility in the world and is based in Delft, Netherlands. Delft is a world renowned knowledge centre on water infrastructure, technology and sciences, and attracts high-level students and scientists from around the globe. IHE Delft cooperates with Delft, the water knowledge city, and water related institutes based in Delft. The Institute confers fully accredited MSc degrees, and PhD degrees together with partners in the Netherlands. Since 1957 the Institute has provided graduate education to more than 23,000 water professionals from over 190 countries, and is a flagship institute in the UN-Water family.
Johannes Aleidis (Johan) Ringers was a Dutch hydraulic engineer and politician. He served as the director-general of Rijkswaterstaat and later as the director of Dutch East Indies Railways. During World War II, Ringers was appointed as the government commissioner for reconstruction, but was later interned by German forces.
Johan van Veen was a Dutch hydraulic engineer. He is considered the father of the Delta Works.
The Markiezaatskade is a compartmentalisation dam in The Netherlands, situated between South Beveland and Molenplaat, near Bergen op Zoom. The dam was constructed as part of the Delta Works, and has a length of 4 kilometres.
The Volkerakdam or Volkerakwerken is the name given to a group of hydraulic engineering structures located between Goeree-Overflakkee and North Brabant in The Netherlands. The works are not a single dam, but are composed of three distinct structures: a dam between Goeree-Overflakkee and Hellegatsplein, a series of locks from Hellegatsplein to North Brabant, and a bridge from Hellegatsplein to Hoekse Waard. The works cross three separate bodies of water: the Haringvliet, Hollands Diep and Volkerak. The works together comprise the fifth project of the Delta Works.
Ramón Iribarren CavanillesIng.D was a Spanish civil engineer and professor of ports at the School of Civil Engineering in Madrid. He was chairman of the Spanish delegation to the Permanent International Association of Navigation Congresses (PIANC) and was elected as an academic at the Spanish Royal Academy of Sciences, although he did not take up the latter position. He made notable contributions in the field of coastal engineering, including methods for the calculation of breakwater stability and research which led to the development of the Iribarren number.
The Grevelingendam is a dam located in the Grevelingen sea inlet between Schouwen-Duiveland and Goeree-Overflakkee in The Netherlands. The Grevelingendam was the fourth structure constructed as part of the Delta Works.
Wave overtopping is the time-averaged amount of water that is discharged per structure length by waves over a structure such as a breakwater, revetment or dike which has a crest height above still water level.
Wave run-up is the height to which waves run up the slope of a revetment, bank or dike, regardless of whether the waves are breaking or not. Conversely, wave run-down is the height to which waves recede. These heights are always measured vertically. The wave run-up height, denoted by , , or , is a very important parameter in coastal engineering as, together with the design highest still water level, it determines the required crest height of a dike or revetment.
Johannes Theodoor Thijsse was a Dutch hydraulic engineer who made significant contributions to hydraulic engineering both in The Netherlands and internationally. In addition to having a major involvement in the design and planning of both the Zuiderzee Works and the Delta Works, he published widely and played a key role in the establishment of the IHE Delft Institute for Water Education.
Frank Spaargaren was a Dutch hydraulic engineer who was one of the main designers of the Oosterscheldekering and served as a director of the Waterloopkundig Laboratorium in Delft.
The Waterloopkundig Laboratorium was an independent Dutch scientific institute specialising in hydraulics and hydraulic engineering. The laboratory was established in Delft from 1927, moving to a new location in the city in 1973. The institute later became known as WL | Delft Hydraulics. In 2008, the laboratory was incorporated into the international nonprofit Deltares institute.
Pieter Philippus Jansen was a Dutch civil engineer and hydraulic engineer who made significant contributions to hydraulic engineering in The Netherlands. He spent the majority of his career with Rijkswaterstaat, working on several major projects including the first phase of the Delta Works and leading the reclamation and repair efforts following the inundation of Walcheren.
Yoshimi Goda was a Japanese civil engineer who made significant contributions to coastal engineering in Japan and internationally. He undertook a large volume of research on coastal engineering problems, and developed methods for the design of monolithic breakwaters.
Jan Fokke Agema was a Dutch hydraulic engineer and professor at Delft University of Technology. He is notable for his design of the harbour entrance at Hoek van Holland and involvement in the construction of the Oosterscheldekering. The prof. dr.ir. J.F. Agemaprijs is named for him, and has been awarded every five years since 2000.
A fascine mattress(Dutch: Zinkstuk, literally sink piece), is a large woven mat made of brushwood, typically willow twigs and shoots, used to protect riverbeds and other underwater surfaces from scour and erosion. They are similar in construction to a fascine, but are primarily used for hydraulic engineering works, typically to strengthen the banks of rivers and streams, as well as coastal structures like revetments and groynes.
A compartmentalisation dam is a dam that divides a body of water into two parts. A typical use of such a dam is the regulation of water levels separately in different sections of a basin. One application of a compartmentalisation dam is to facilitate closures of areas with multiple tidal inlets, such as in the case of the Delta Works.
Emmericus Carel Willem Adriaan "Wim" Geuze was a Dutch civil engineer who contributed to the development of soil mechanics, and the founding of the geotechnical engineering journal, Géotechnique. He was head of research at the Laboratorium voor Grondmechanica in Delft, and professor of soil mechanics at Delft University of Technology and the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
Deltares is a Groot Technologisch Instituut (GTI) in the Netherlands specialising in hydraulic engineering research and consulting, along with water management, geotechnics, and infrastructure. The organisation's research mainly focuses on rivers and river deltas, coastal regions, and offshore engineering. As of 2020, Deltares employed over 750 full-time equivalent (FTE) staff members from 42 nationalities, located in Delft and Utrecht. The turnover in 2020 was €112 million.
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